Service Provides Cellular Connectivity For Arduino IoT Cloud

Arduino has launched Arduino SIM, a SIM-only service exclusively for IoT devices based on the Arduino platform, to give developers and manufacturers cellular access to the Arduino IoT Cloud platform from over 100 countries with a single data plan and competitive pricing. Arduino SIM aims to provide a simple path to cellular IoT device development in a familiar environment. The Arduino SIM data plan is launching initially in the US, with availability in Europe and Asia to follow in summer 2019. 

Fully integrated with Arduino IoT Cloud, Arduino SIM is continuing Arduino’s mission to democratize IoT technology, making cellular IoT accessible to everyone from makers to professionals across domains already using Arduino today – in education, agriculture, industrial, retail and more. Users can easily send sensor data to databases, spreadsheets or alerts, without any coding necessary, using Webhooks, or are able to create custom IoT applications using the API.

Arduino SIM is initially rolling out with support for Arduino MKR GSM 1400 (3G with 2G fallback) – a 32-bit Arduino board supporting TLS and X.509 certificate-based authentication through an on-board secure element and crypto-accelerator. Arduino IoT Cloud makes it possible for anyone to connect to these boards securely without any coding required, but they are still programmable using open-source libraries and the traditional Arduino IDE. A roadmap is in place to support the upcoming Arduino MKR NB 1500 (LTE Cat-M and NB-IoT), with plans to open it to third party cellular boards later.

Arduino SIM provides a streamlined path for cellular IoT development with 10 MB of data free for up to 90 days, and the option for a simple subscription at 5 MB for $1.50 per month. The plan provides the same amount of data traffic for the same price wherever in the world the device is being operated. By partnering with Arm Pelion Connectivity Management, the cellular service has a solid foundation for users planning to scale to large numbers of devices in the future.

For more details, visit Arduino.